No because it doesn't contain aromatic group
No, because phenylalanine does not react with the nitric acid in this test.
No, because phenylalanine does not react with the nitric acid in this test.
If a patient has an order for fast-acting insulin, yes you would give the number of Units ordered. However, some patients receive insulin once a day instead; if they still have high BS then they should discuss these with their physician so he can adust the regular or fast-acting insulin.
Discuss that with your doctor. We do not give medical advice.
The protons
yes...!
yes
Phenylalanine gave a yellow to orange color in xanthoproteic test which means it is positive.
My son normally eats 10minutes after I give him insulin
No, because phenylalanine does not react with the nitric acid in this test.
You have 'human Insulin' produced by a technique called as 'Genetic engineering'. In this you put 'Human gene' isolated from 'Human cells' into DNA of microorganism. They produce 'exact' replica of 'human insulin' and isextremelyuseful. It will never ever form antibody like Pig Insulin or Bovine insulin. But it has a dis-advantage of Pharmacokinetics. Given intro-venous or intramuscular it has half life of only about 8 minutes. So you have to give it either by continuous intro-venous drip or by repeated intro-muscular injections say every 10 to 15 minutes. For slow absorption, you have to give sub-cutaneous injection. Then it becomes too slow and you do not have a route in between. If you give subcutaneous injection of 'Human insulin', then there is immediate hyperglycemia, fallowed by hyperglycemia. So you have designers Insulin with there own disadvantages.
yes! but actually for phenylalanine it just weakly positive or negative because the aromatic ring is not activated so it is not give the positive result...phenylalanine need certain condition to give positive result
no from insulin but diabetes, liver disease, kidney infection may show up false positive on drug tests.
No because it doesn't contain aromatic group
In this reaction the yellow xanthoproteic acid is formed.
You don't give insulin orally ! Insulin needs to be injected into the patient's bloodstream. The acids in the stomach would break down the insulin - rendering it useless.
Can a personal care assistant give insulin
We are able to "splice" genes from one organism into the DNA of another to give it traits we want. In this case, we put the gene for insulin into the DNA of a bacterium, which causes it to produce insulin, which we can use.